‘We’re going to talk this through,’ said Compass Box founder and whiskymaker John Glaser in an interview with Scotchwhisky.com. ‘Hopefully, after that discussion, there will be some more clarity with what the timescale will be and how long things will take.’

But Glaser said he did not believe the company should have to join the organisation in order to progress the transparency campaign.

‘I would hope that the answer to that is no,’ he said. ‘The answer to that should be no… I do have a great deal of respect for much of what the SWA does, although we’ve had our differences over the years.’

Glaser said Compass Box had not yet made a decision on whether or not to join Bruichladdich in breaking the current EU and UK law by offering a detailed breakdown of its future bottlings.

‘We haven’t decided yet,’ he said. ‘We’ve got to think about that and probably talk to the lawyers.’

The transparency issue was sparked into life last October when the SWA warned Compass Box that it risked breaking the law by communicating detailed information about the age, origin and proportions of the whiskies in two new products, Flaming Heart and This Is Not A Luxury Whisky.

It prompted an open letter to the Scotch whisky industry from Scotchwhisky.com on the appetite for a change to the law, which currently prohibits the identification of any but the youngest component of any whisky on the label or in any form of communication.